St. James High School (1959–1960) McKinney coached one season at St. James in 1959–60, leading them to a 17–11 record. McKinney is a member of the Saint Joseph's and the Big 5 Halls of Fame. However, he was fired after a first-round loss in the
1974 NCAA Division I basketball tournament, and his dismissal prompted a demonstration by over 500 students.
Los Angeles Lakers (1979) McKinney received his first NBA head coaching job in
1979–80 with the Lakers. Owner
Jerry Buss, who had recently acquired the team, wanted games to be entertaining, and hired the coach to install a running offense. McKinney had rookie
Magic Johnson, who some thought should play
forward, be a
point guard, even though incumbent
Norm Nixon was already one of the best in the league. On November 8, 1979, the Lakers were 9–4 after 13 games, when McKinney suffered a near fatal head injury after falling while bicycling. and the team finished the season with a record of 60–22. The Lakers won the series for their first of five NBA titles in nine seasons, and hired Westhead to permanently replace McKinney.
Pat Riley, who replaced Westhead as Lakers coach, won four titles with the team and became the coach most synonymous with the Showtime Lakers. However, Norm Nixon credited McKinney with creating Showtime. "That should never be forgotten," said Nixon. According to Riley, McKinney "might have won five or six titles for the Lakers in the '80s" were it not for his accident. In his first season, McKinney was named the
NBA Coach of the Year after leading the Pacers to their first playoff appearance since the former
American Basketball Association (ABA) team joined the NBA during the
ABA–NBA merger of 1976. Over the next three seasons, however, the team's performance regressed, and McKinney was fired after the Pacers posted the league's worst record in the
1983–84 season.
Kansas City Kings (1984) McKinney was soon hired as the head coach of the Kansas City Kings, but resigned from the position on November 18, 1984, after the team started with a 1–8 record in the
1984–85 season. He left coaching for good afterwards, citing ongoing issues with his memory, plus no longer feeling passionate about the profession. ==Post-coaching career==